Bryan Cutler

American politician from Pennsylvania
Bryan Cutler
Minority Leader of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives
Incumbent
Assumed office
February 8, 2023
Preceded byJoanna McClinton
141st Speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives
In office
June 22, 2020 – November 30, 2022
Preceded byMike Turzai
Succeeded byMark Rozzi
Majority Leader of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives
In office
December 1, 2022 – February 8, 2023
Preceded byKerry A. Benninghoff
Succeeded byJoanna McClinton
In office
December 1, 2018 – June 22, 2020
Preceded byDave L. Reed
Succeeded byKerry A. Benninghoff
Member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives
from the 100th district
Incumbent
Assumed office
January 2, 2007
Preceded byGibson C. Armstrong
Personal details
Born
Bryan Dean Cutler

1975 (age 48–49)
Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Political partyRepublican
SpouseJennifer
Children1
EducationLebanon Valley College (B.S.)
Widener University (J.D.)
WebsiteOfficial website

Bryan Dean Cutler[1] (born 1975) is an American politician and former Speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives.[2] A Republican, Cutler represents the 100th legislative district of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives.[3] He was first elected in 2006, defeating incumbent Gibson C. Armstrong.[4] He was elected House Majority Leader after the 2018 elections,[5] and he became Speaker on June 22, 2020, after the resignation of Mike Turzai.[6]

Early life and career

Cutler was born in 1975 in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. He graduated from Solanco High School in 1993.[7] Cutler earned certification from Lancaster School of Radiology in 1995 and received a bachelor of science degree from Lebanon Valley College in 2001. In 2006, he earned a juris doctor degree from Widener University School of Law. Cutler also has a certificate in health care from Widener. He worked as an X-ray technologist at Lancaster Regional Medical Center and as a Manager of Support Services at Lancaster General Hospital.[8]

Cutler served on the Drumore Township Planning Commission.[7]

Pennsylvania House of Representatives

He was first elected in 2006, defeating incumbent Gibson C. Armstrong, who voted against the controversial 2005 legislative pay raise.[9] Despite his initial vote against the pay raise Armstrong later filed paperwork to receive it angering many of his constituents.[10]

In 2014, in response to paychecks being subject to the state taking union dues from them, Cutler put forth a proposal to have this discontinued.[11] Cutler argued that the state ought to stay out of the handling of union dues because the state is aware that a certain percentage of union dues is used for political purposes including lobbying and paying for ads.[11]

In 2015, Cutler voiced some of the worries he had about Governor Tom Wolf's proposed severance tax.[12] Cutler said, “If we’re gonna stunt the economic growth and future impact I think we have to consider that.”[12]

Later in 2015, following the terror attacks in Paris, Cutler supported keeping Syrian refugees out of Pennsylvania.[13] Governor Tom Wolf's permitting of Syrian refugees into the state was criticized by Cutler and other Pennsylvania Republicans.[13] Cutler has said, “there is a real difference between those that seek peace and security and those that would use this opportunity to advance terrorism.”[13]

In 2016, Cutler co-sponsored a memorandum in support of House Bill 1948, which was put forth by State Representative Kathy Rapp.[14] The bill's purpose was to make it so that abortions in Pennsylvania would only be permitted during the first 20 weeks of pregnancy.[14] Cutler, along with Rapp and Representative Bryan Barbin, wrote in the memorandum that the bill would also put a stop to dismemberment being used as an abortion method.[14]

Cutler supports the Atlantic Sunrise natural gas pipeline passing through Lancaster County.[15] Due to concerns involving private property and nature reserves, a request was made to have the pipeline re-routed.[16] However, believing that it would be less of a problem for roads, streams and properties, residents of Conestoga Township and Martic Township petitioned in favor of the first proposed route.[16] Cutler was given these petitions.[16]

Cutler was against legalizing medical cannabis in Pennsylvania and opposed a bill that would do so.[17][18] He cited the illegal federal status under the Controlled Substances Act, the opioid epidemic, and other concerns.[19][20][21]

Following the 2020 presidential election, Cutler was subject to a pressure campaign by President Donald Trump and his allies to help overturn Trump's defeat in Pennsylvania. Cutler resisted these efforts, stating that the state legislature did not have the power to decertify election results. Cutler would later sign on to a letter urging members of the U.S. Congress to vote against certifying the election.[22]

References

  1. ^ "CUTLER, Bryan Dean" (PDF). House.state.pa.us. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  2. ^ Hall, Peter (December 12, 2022). "Cutler Takes Oath as House Republican Leader Days after Dems Declare Control of Special Elections". Pennsylvania-Capital Star. Retrieved 13 December 2022.
  3. ^ "SESSION OF 2007 191ST OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY No. 1" (PDF). LEGISLATIVE JOURNAL. Pennsylvania House of Representatives. 2007-01-02. Retrieved 2009-01-09.
  4. ^ "2006 General Election - Representative in the General Assembly". Commonwealth of PA - Elections Information. Pennsylvania Department of State. 2004. Archived from the original on 2008-11-27. Retrieved 2009-01-09.
  5. ^ "Officers of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives". Pennsylvania House of Representatives. Retrieved 3 April 2015.
  6. ^ Scolforo, Mark (June 22, 2020). "House votes to make Republican Rep. Cutler its next speaker". Erie News Now. Associated Press. Retrieved June 22, 2020.
  7. ^ a b "Bryan D. Cutler". Pennsylvania House of Representatives Archives. Retrieved 31 March 2024.
  8. ^ "Representative Bryan Cutler (PA)". Project Vote Smart. Archived from the original on September 30, 2010. Retrieved 31 March 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  9. ^ "County GOP voters reject 3 incumbents". Intelligencer Journal (Lancaster, PA). LancasterOnline.com. 2006-05-17.
  10. ^ "Pay raise protests slam PA legislators". Intelligencer Journal (Lancaster, PA). LancasterOnline.com. 2005-09-27.
  11. ^ a b Frantz, Jeff (28 January 2014). "Bill would stop Pennsylvania from collecting union dues from paychecks". PennLive.com. PA Media Group. Retrieved 9 December 2016.
  12. ^ a b Owens, Dennis (11 February 2015). "Wolf, as promised, lays out his plan to tax gas drillers". ABC27. Media General Communications Holdings, LLC. Retrieved 9 December 2016.
  13. ^ a b c Alexandersen, Christian (17 November 2015). "'The security of Pennsylvanians must take priority': Republican lawmakers want to ban Syrian refugees". PennLive.com. PA Media Group. Retrieved 9 December 2016.
  14. ^ a b c WHTM Staff (1 April 2016). "Pa. bill would expand abortion act". ABC27. Media General Communications Holdings, LLC. Retrieved 9 December 2016.
  15. ^ LNP, Philip R. Wenger. "We must protect Lancaster County's own Yellowstone". LancasterOnline. LancasterOnline. Retrieved 9 December 2016.
  16. ^ a b c Crable, Ad. "FERC to consider gas pipeline re-routing away from Solanco properties". LancasterOnline. LancasterOnline. Retrieved 9 December 2016.
  17. ^ "Kudos to Pennsylvania Lawmakers for Passing Medical Marijuana Bill". Lancaster Online. Retrieved 5 July 2021.
  18. ^ "Gov. Wolf: PA should take a 'serious and honest look' at legalizing recreational marijuana". Billy Penn.
  19. ^ McGoldrick, Gillian. "From Lt. Gov. Fetterman's Listening Tour, 67% of Lancaster County Residents Say They're Ready for Recreational Marijuana". Lancaster Online. Retrieved 5 July 2021.
  20. ^ "Now is the Wrong Time to Promote Marijuana | PA House Majority Leader Bryan Cutler". www.repcutler.com.
  21. ^ "House GOP leaders: 'No interest in legalizing recreational marijuana'". Times Leader. 29 September 2019.
  22. ^ White, Jaxon (March 12, 2024). "Cutler backs Trump for president, says he's worried about 2024 election integrity". LancasterOnline. Retrieved 13 March 2024.

External links

  • Pennsylvania House of Representatives - Bryan Cutler official PA House website
  • Pennsylvania House Republican Caucus - Representative Bryan Cutler official Party website
  • Elect Byran Cutler 100th District House of Representatives official campaign site
  • Bryan Cutler 100th District Candidate Pennsylvania House of Representatives archived 2006 campaign site
Pennsylvania House of Representatives
Preceded by Majority Leader of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives
2018–2020
Succeeded by
Preceded by Majority Leader of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives
2022–2023
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minority Leader of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives
2023–present
Incumbent
Political offices
Preceded by Speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives
2020–2022
Succeeded by
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Majority leaders
Mark Wright (R)
David Moon (D)
Mike Moran (D)
Jamie Long (DFL)
[to be determined] (R)
Sue Vinton (R)
Ray Aguilar (R)*
Jason Osborne (R)
Mike Lefor (R)
Bill Seitz (R)
Josh West (R)
Ben Bowman (D)
Emily Long (D)
Federal districts:
Territories:
Rory Respicio (D)*
Ed Propst (D)
Kenneth Gittens (D)*
Political party affiliations
Republican: 28 states
Democratic: 21 states, 3 territories, 1 district
Popular Democratic: 1 territory
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Minority leaders
Anthony Daniels (D)
James Gallagher (R)
Vic Miller (D)
Derrick Graham (D)
Matt Hall (R)
Kim Abbott (D)
Vacant*
Zac Ista (D-NPL)
Bryan Cutler (R)
Mike Yin (D)
Federal districts:
None*
Territories:
Chris Duenas (R)*
Patrick San Nicolas (R)
Dwayne DeGraff (I)*
Political party affiliations
Democratic: 27 states
Republican: 21 states, 2 territories
Independent: 1 state
New Progressive: 1 territory
An asterisk (*) indicates a unicameral body.
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Speaker
Joanna McClinton (D)
Majority Leader
Matthew Bradford (D)
Minority Leader
Bryan Cutler (R)
  1. Pat Harkins (D)
  2. Robert Merski (D)
  3. Ryan Bizzarro (D)
  4. Jake Banta (R)
  5. Barry Jozwiak (R)
  6. Brad Roae (R)
  7. Parke Wentling (R)
  8. Aaron Bernstine (R)
  9. Marla Brown (R)
  10. Amen Brown (D)
  11. Marci Mustello (R)
  12. Stephenie Scialabba (R)
  13. John Lawrence (R)
  14. Jim Marshall (R)
  15. Josh Kail (R)
  16. Robert Matzie (D)
  17. Timothy R. Bonner (R)
  18. K.C. Tomlinson (R)
  19. Aerion Abney (D)
  20. Emily Kinkead (D)
  21. Lindsay Powell (D)
  22. Joshua Siegel (D)
  23. Dan Frankel (D)
  24. La'Tasha Mayes (D)
  25. Brandon Markosek (D)
  26. Paul Friel (D)
  27. Dan Deasy (D)
  28. Rob Mercuri (R)
  29. Tim Brennan (D)
  30. Arvind Venkat (D)
  31. Perry Warren (D)
  32. Joe McAndrew (D)
  33. Mandy Steele (D)
  34. Abigail Salisbury (D)
  35. Matt Gergely (D)
  36. Jessica Benham (D)
  37. Mindy Fee (R)
  38. Nick Pisciottano (D)
  39. Andrew Kuzma (R)
  40. Natalie Mihalek (R)
  41. Brett Miller (R)
  42. Dan Miller (D)
  43. Keith Greiner (R)
  44. Valerie Gaydos (R)
  45. Anita Kulik (D)
  46. Jason Ortitay (R)
  47. Joseph D'Orsie (R)
  48. Tim O'Neal (R)
  49. Ismail Smith-Wade-El (D)
  50. Bud Cook (R)
  51. Charity Grimm Krupa (R)
  52. Ryan Warner (R)
  53. Steve Malagari (D)
  54. Greg Scott (D)
  55. Jill N. Cooper (R)
  56. George Dunbar (R)
  57. Eric Nelson (R)
  58. Eric Davanzo (R)
  59. Leslie Rossi (R)
  60. Abby Major (R)
  61. Liz Hanbidge (D)
  62. Jim Struzzi (R)
  63. Donna Oberlander (R)
  64. Lee James (R)
  65. Kathy Rapp (R)
  66. Brian Smith (R)
  67. Martin Causer (R)
  68. Clint Owlett (R)
  69. Carl Walker Metzgar (R)
  70. Matthew Bradford (D)
  71. James Rigby (R)
  72. Frank Burns (D)
  73. Dallas Kephart (R)
  74. Dan Williams (D)
  75. Michael Armanini (R)
  76. Stephanie Borowicz (R)
  77. H. Scott Conklin (D)
  78. Jesse Topper (R)
  79. Louis Schmitt Jr. (R)
  80. Jim Gregory (R)
  81. Richard Irvin (R)
  82. Paul Takac (D)
  83. Jamie Flick (R)
  84. Joseph Hamm (R)
  85. David Rowe (R)
  86. Perry Stambaugh (R)
  87. Thomas Kutz (R)
  88. Sheryl Delozier (R)
  89. Rob Kauffman (R)
  90. Paul Schemel (R)
  91. Dan Moul (R)
  92. Dawn Keefer (R)
  93. Mike Jones (R)
  94. Wendy Fink (R)
  95. Carol Hill-Evans (D)
  96. Mike Sturla (D)
  97. Steven Mentzer (R)
  98. Tom Jones (R)
  99. David Zimmerman (R)
  100. Bryan Cutler (R)
  101. John A. Schlegel (R)
  102. Russ Diamond (R)
  103. Patty Kim (D)
  104. Dave Madsen (D)
  105. Justin C. Fleming (D)
  106. Tom Mehaffie (R)
  107. Joanne Stehr (R)
  108. Michael Stender (R)
  109. Robert Leadbeter (R)
  110. Tina Pickett (R)
  111. Jonathan Fritz (R)
  112. Kyle Mullins (D)
  113. Kyle Donahue (D)
  114. Bridget Kosierowski (D)
  115. Maureen Madden (D)
  116. Dane Watro (R)
  117. Mike Cabell (R)
  118. Jim Haddock (D)
  119. Alec Ryncavage (R)
  120. Aaron Kaufer (R)
  121. Eddie Day Pashinski (D)
  122. Doyle Heffley (R)
  123. Timothy Twardzik (R)
  124. Jamie Barton (R)
  125. Joe Kerwin (R)
  126. Mark Rozzi (D)
  127. Manny Guzman (D)
  128. Mark Gillen (R)
  129. Johanny Cepeda-Freytiz (D)
  130. David Maloney (R)
  131. Milou Mackenzie (R)
  132. Mike Schlossberg (D)
  133. Jeanne McNeill (D)
  134. Peter Schweyer (D)
  135. Steve Samuelson (D)
  136. Robert Freeman (D)
  137. Joe Emrick (R)
  138. Ann Flood (R)
  139. Vacant
  140. Jim Prokopiak (D)
  141. Tina Davis (D)
  142. Joe Hogan (R)
  143. Shelby Labs (R)
  144. Brian Munroe (D)
  145. Craig Staats (R)
  146. Joe Ciresi (D)
  147. Donna Scheuren (R)
  148. Mary Jo Daley (D)
  149. Tim Briggs (D)
  150. Joe Webster (D)
  151. Melissa Cerrato (D)
  152. Nancy Guenst (D)
  153. Ben Sanchez (D)
  154. Napoleon Nelson (D)
  155. Danielle Friel Otten (D)
  156. Chris Pielli (D)
  157. Melissa Shusterman (D)
  158. Christina Sappey (D)
  159. Carol Kazeem (D)
  160. W. Craig Williams (R)
  161. Leanne Krueger (D)
  162. David Delloso (D)
  163. Heather Boyd (D)
  164. Gina Curry (D)
  165. Jennifer O'Mara (D)
  166. Greg Vitali (D)
  167. Kristine Howard (D)
  168. Lisa Borowski (D)
  169. Kate Klunk (R)
  170. Martina White (R)
  171. Kerry Benninghoff (R)
  172. Kevin J. Boyle (D)
  173. Pat Gallagher (D)
  174. Ed Neilson (D)
  175. Mary Isaacson (D)
  176. Jack Rader (R)
  177. Joe Hohenstein (D)
  178. Kristin Marcell (R)
  179. Jason Dawkins (D)
  180. Jose Giral (D)
  181. Malcolm Kenyatta (D)
  182. Ben Waxman (D)
  183. Zach Mako (R)
  184. Elizabeth Fiedler (D)
  185. Regina Young (D)
  186. Jordan Harris (D)
  187. Ryan Mackenzie (R)
  188. Rick Krajewski (D)
  189. Tarah Probst (D)
  190. G. Roni Green (D)
  191. Joanna McClinton (D)
  192. Morgan Cephas (D)
  193. Torren Ecker (R)
  194. Tarik Khan (D)
  195. Donna Bullock (D)
  196. Seth Grove (R)
  197. Danilo Burgos (D)
  198. Darisha Parker (D)
  199. Barbara Gleim (R)
  200. Chris Rabb (D)
  201. Stephen Kinsey (D)
  202. Jared Solomon (D)
  203. Anthony A. Bellmon (D)
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Seal of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives